Effects of Cigarette-Derived Compounds on the Spread of Antimicrobial Resistance in Artificial Human Lung Sputum Medium, Simulated Environmental Media, and Wastewater

  28 April 2025

The study investigates the impact of cigarette smoke, ashes, and filters on the spread of antibiotic resistance genes in human lung and environmental microbiomes. It found that exposure to cigarette smoke condensate and cigarette ash leachate increased transfer rates of a multidrug-resistance-encoding plasmid in artificial lung sputum medium, leading to higher reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. The study also found that used cigarette filters were colonized by microbial communities enriched with potential human pathogens and AMR. The findings suggest that cigarette-derived compounds can promote the spread of AMR, highlighting the direct and indirect adverse effects of tobacco consumption.

Author(s): Peiju Fang et al
Clean Environment  
Back

OUR UNDERWRITERS

Unrestricted financial support by:

Antimicrobial Resistance Fighter Coalition

Bangalore Bioinnovation Centre

INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION PHARMACEUTICAL MANUFACTURERS & ASSOCIATIONS

BD





AMR NEWS

Your Biweekly Source for Global AMR Insights!

Stay informed with the essential newsletter that brings together all the latest One Health news on antimicrobial resistance. Delivered straight to your inbox every two weeks, AMR NEWS provides a curated selection of international insights, key publications, and the latest updates in the fight against AMR.

Don’t miss out on staying ahead in the global AMR movement—subscribe now!

Subscribe
What is going on with AMR?
Stay tuned with remarkable global AMR news and developments!